Skip to main content

Please enter a keyword and click the arrow to search the site

Option prices and costly short-selling

Subject

Finance

Publishing details

Working Paper

Authors / Editors

Basak S;Atmaz A

Biographies

Publication Year

2017

Abstract

We provide an analysis of option prices with costly short-selling. Short-sellers incur a shorting fee to borrow stock shares from investors who do not necessarily lend all their long positions (partial lending). We incorporate costly short-selling and options market-making into the classic Black-Scholes framework and obtain unique option bid and ask prices in closed-form. Option prices represent market-makers' expected cost of hedging, and are in terms of and preserve the well-known properties of the Black-Scholes prices. Consistently with empirical evidence, we show that bid-ask spreads of typical options and apparent put-call parity violations are increasing in the shorting fee. We also find that option bid-ask spreads are decreasing in the partial lending, and the effects of costly short-selling on option bid-ask spreads are more pronounced for relatively illiquid options with lower trading activity. We then apply our model to the recent 2008 short-selling ban period and obtain implications consistent with the documented behavior of option prices of banned stocks. Finally, our quantitative analysis reveals that the effects of costly short-selling on option prices are economically significant for expensive-to-short stocks and also sheds light on the behavior of option prices and apparent mispricings of the Palm stock in 2000.

Keywords

Option prices; Short-selling; Shorting fee; Partial lending; Options marketmaking; Hedging costs; Bid-ask spreads; Put-call parity violations; Short-selling bans

Series

Working Paper

Available on ECCH

No


Select up to 4 programmes to compare

Select one more to compare
×
subscribe_image_desktop 5949B9BFE33243D782D1C7A17E3345D0

Sign up to receive our latest news and business thinking direct to your inbox

×

Sign up to receive our latest course information and business thinking

Leave your details above if you would like to receive emails containing the latest thought leadership, invitations to events and news about courses that could enhance your career. If you would prefer not to receive our emails, you can still access the case study by clicking the button below. You can opt-out of receiving our emails at any time by visiting: https://london.edu/my-profile-preferences or by unsubscribing through the link provided in our emails. View our Privacy Policy for more information on your rights.